Father John A. Hardon, S.J. Archives

Fr. Hardon

Easter and the Holy Eucharist - Fr. Hardon's Letter

by Fr. John A. Hardon, S.J.

Except for Easter Sunday, we would not have the Holy Eucharist today.

Why not? Because the Holy Eucharist is the Risen savior who is now on earth in the Real Presence. He is now offering Himself
daily in the Sacrifice of the Mass. And He is now giving Himself to us in Holy Communion.

On Holy Thursday night, Jesus did three things:

He changed the common elements of bread and wine into His own living Body and Blood.

He offered His human life to His heavenly Father, to be accomplished on Calvary, when He would bleed to death in order to restore
eternal life to a fallen human family.

He gave the disciples His flesh to eat and His blood to drink in order to sustain those in His grace and raise them up on the last day.

Then Jesus did one more thing. He ordained His apostles to the priesthood and thus gave them and their successors the power to
continue doing what He had done - until the end of time.

The Presence Sacrament

At the Last Supper, when Jesus pronounced the words, "This is my body . . . This is the chalice of my blood," He held Himself in His own hands.
But the human nature He then possessed was a mortal humanity. Hours later on Good Friday He died on the Cross, and before sundown His
dead body was buried in the grave.

On the third day, He rose from the dead in a glorified body that was immortal and would never die again.

Consequently the Jesus present in the Eucharist today is the victorious Christ who conquered death and who is in our midst pouring out
His grace. Like Him, we too are to die. But like Him we are to rise on the last day. Our one condition: that we believe in Him, and by believing
may follow Him now in suffering, so that we may join Him in a glorious eternity.

The Sacrifice Sacrament

Every time Mass is offered, Jesus is giving Himself to His heavenly Father. He can no longer die, but with His human will He can
continue surrendering His human life for our salvation. He physically died only once, and thus merited our redemption. In the Mass,
He mystically dies every time the Holy Sacrifice is celebrated and through the Mass confers the graces we so desperately need to remain faithful to His name.

Holy Mass is therefore both a sacrifice and sacrament. It is a sacrifice because Christ really surrenders Himself, and us along with
Him to the eternal Father. It is a sacrament because from the Mass the whole human race receives the strength it needs to give up its own selfish
will to the demanding, and loving, will of God.

Communion Sacrament

The capstone of the Holy Eucharist is Holy Communion, whose very name tells us what it can do for a soul who receives her Lord with a loving charity. It makes her holy.

If the perfection of love is unity, the reception of divine Love - become - man gives us the light and strength we need to be, and remain,
united with Jesus, no matter how heavy the price may be.

Except for Holy Communion, we could not remain firm in our loyalty to Jesus
Christ. We could not remain patient under trial, We could not remain humble under
human praise. We could not remain clear in our vision that sees everything here on earth as only a means to our final destiny.

In her Dialogue on Prayer, St. Catherine of Siena shares this observation of Christ about Holy Communion.
"By receiving this sacrament," He says, "the soul dwells in me and I in her as the fish in the sea, and the sea in the fish - thus do I dwell in
the soul, and the soul in me - the sea of peace."

There is nothing we desire more than peace. Very well! The secret is to accept in our bodies the Prince of Peace, and then cooperate with the graces we receive.